- title of a
novel by Thomas Wolfe
They were
standing in the garden of the Villa Atterton and looked silently at
the big building in front of them. Ten years had passed since they
had seen it the last time. Ten years for them, but only one year of
the villa. But still there were a few, subtle changes: windows had
been replaced, parts of the roof repaired and there was new flower
bed in the garden.
The door to
one of the balconies opened and Bill exited. He saw them immediately,
but it took him several moments to recognise them. “Alice? Alex?”,
he cried in surprise. “You... have grown old.”
“You
look well too”, Alexander answered after a moment's hesitation.
“How are you?”
“Fine,
fine”, said Bill.
“Is
Mowgli there?”, Alexander asked.
“Mowgli?
No, he is... well, right now he is probably still in London, but he
should be getting on the ship in a few hours”, Bill told him. “He
wants to go to India.”
“And
Sarina?”, Alice wanted to know.
“She
got a job at an excavation site”, Bill informed her. “Somewhere
in France, if I remember it correctly.”
“And
what are you still doing here?”, Alexander said.
Bill just
shrugged as an answer. “Come in, the kitchen door should be open!”,
he told them.
“For
the others, we had only been gone one year, but a lot can and did
happen... and change during that time”, Mr Tuniak told me. “New
people were living in the Villa Atterton and on the Island Leviathan
now, the next generation had taken over, so to speak. Of course, if
we had wanted to, there would still have been a place for us at
either of these locations.”
“But
you didn't want to?”, I asked.
“Yes...
no”, Mr Tuniak said. “At first we did want to go back. We, Alice
and I, we wanted to just go back and pick our lives up just where we
had left them. We thought we could pretend that our absence had never
happened. We were of course wrong.”
“Because
you missed a whole year. Couldn't you just have returned earlier?”
“The
problem wasn't the missing year”, Mr Tuniak corrected me. “The
problem was that a lot more time had passed for us. We were not only
ten years older than all our friend, we also had lived through a lot
of things during that time.” “He looked at me. “You are too
young to have experienced this, but I'm sure one day you will. If you
have a friend, a good friend, and you haven't seen him for a very
long time and then suddenly you meet him again... the best case you
can hope for then is that you will talk about what you have done
since you last met. If the worst case happens, you will discover that
you have nothing in common any more.”
“And
that's what happened to you?”
“Yes.”
“Did...
Bill and Mowgli and the others... did they know what you did?”
“No,
only Sarina really knew”, Mr Tuniak said. “The others thought
that we had just been travelling through time. Without aim or
purpose. Just for fun.”
“So,
what did you do then?”
“We
are here”, Alexander announced, after the time machine had landed.
“And
where is here?”, Alice asked. A week had passed since they had
returned to the Villa Atterton. Fourteen days during which they had
tried without success to get back to their former lives. Finally,
they had had to admit that too much time had passed and had decided
to once again enter the time machine.
“Where
to?”, Alice had asked.
“That's
a surprise”, Alexander had promised.
And so they
had entered the time machine again and departed. Saying good-bye to
the villa and its inhabitants had been surprisingly easy.
“Take
a look outside”, Alexander suggested and opened the door of the
time machine.
Alice did,
as he had said. She saw that they had landed close to a big city.
Trained by her countless travels through time Alice was able to
pinpoint very quickly when and where she was. Small details (like the
architecture of the buildings, the plants that were growing, noises
she heard) combined in her mind to offer a full picture of where she
was.
“It's
the beginning, no the middle of the twentieth century... America”,
she said to herself. “Oh, of course! That's New York!”
“Yes,
New York, and the year is 1946”, Alexander told her. “I thought
you might want to visit someone who lives here.”
“Whom
do I know who lives...”, Alice started, before the penny dropped.
“My parents”, she whispered, barely audible.
“I
asked Louis”, Alexander said. “He told me when and where to find
them. One year ago your parents met and it will be another two years
before they move to England.”
Alice turned
around to face him. “Why?”, she asked.
“The
first time you asked me why I hadn't tried to change history, I
thought you were only asking because of your parents”, he
explained. “I thought that maybe you wanted to see them or maybe
you wanted to bring them into the future. But in all our travels you
never mentioned them. Not once.”
Alice was
quiet for a few minutes before she answered. “I cannot remember
them. But I do think about them. I do imagine who they were, what
they did... Louis has of course talked about them a lot. Over the
years my image of them has become... quite defined. But it is still
only my imagine of them and not who they really are. In reality it is
quite probable that they were very different from what I thought them
to be.“
Alexander
was nodding. “I imagined it was something like that. When you
talked about Kingsleigh, I was convinced you were feeling the same
thing about something.”
Alice
started to laugh. “Oh, that is great. You are using my own words
against me.”
“Not
against you”, Alexander said. He was holding an envelope in his
hand. “I have got the address of the place where your parents are
working. It's a small circus that's currently doing performances in
the city. We can go there or not. I leave that up to you.”
Alice took
the envelope form him. “Let's go”, she said without hesitation.
“Alice
decided to stay with the circus”, Mr Tuniak explained. “For two
years, until her parents left America. There was no way she could
ever get her childhood back with them, but it was some sort of
compensation. At least, she had finally met her parents and she never
regretted it.”
“She
never told them that she was her future daughter, did she?”, I
asked.
“No,
of course not”, Mr Tuniak said.
“Did
you stay with them the whole time?”
“No”,
he said. “I journeyed on. We agreed that Alice would send a letter
when she wanted to be picked up again. A letter to an apartment that
Philip owned and where I could pick it – and then her – up. When
we parted she told me that she wanted to stay a few months, but in
the end she stayed two years.”
“And
you just jumped two years into the future?”
“I
wanted to do that but – to my own surprise, I must admit – I
discovered that I wanted to spend some time alone”, Mr Tuniak said.
“Nowadays you would probably say: I wanted to find myself or
something similar.” His gesture made it clear that he didn't think
much of that phrase. “Actually, I just needed time to think. I
couldn't change history and I no longer had any desire to do so. But
loosing that idea meant that I also lost what had driven me the last
few years. If you want to put it that way: I had lost my purpose and
was looking for a new one.”
Philip was
walking with measured steps along the small path. From time to time
he was leaning on his hiking stick, because he was feeling tired. He
had walked a long way and the thin air exhausted him further. But his
goal was finally right in front of him: an old monastery, which he
had visited several times before. One day, he thought, he would build
his own similar place of recluse.
He was
walking through the field that surrounded the monastery and where
monks were working. It had been several decades since he had last
been here, but it seemed as if time had stopped at this place.
One of the
men on the fields stopped his work and started to come over to him.
“Alexander?”,
Philip said in surprise.
The man
smiled. “Hello, Philip,” he said.
“What
are you doing here?”, Philip wanted to know.
“I
was looking for a quiet place to think”, Alexander told him. “And
someone I know very well had suggested this place to me.”
Philip
immediately knew that sometime in the future he himself would be this
someone. “Did I also tell you that life here can be quite hard?”,
he asked.
“I
have already experienced that for myself”, Alexander said. “And
I'm not sure if my old bones can actually stand it much longer.”
“If
my old bones can stand it, it should be no problem for yours”,
Philip said. “How old are you?”
“A
bit over forty, I think”, Alexander said. “The work on the
fields, I can manage. It's exhausting, but manageable. And if
something is broken, I can repair it, no problem at all. But the
fitness program they practise here...” He was shaking his head.
“Every day there are new exercises. I'm the worst in my group, but
I can't really tell you why. I do the same things as all the others.
Honestly, sometimes I get the feeling they are secretly practising in
their sleep. It seems impossible otherwise.”
“They
do practise while sleeping”, Philip said. “They can control their
dreams to a certain extent, so they can repeat their exercises in
their sleep. And surprisingly, it does have an actual effect on their
muscles.”
“Really?”
“Yes”,
Philip said. “Didn't they tell you?”
“They
may have, but I've been here for three weeks and I am still having
troubles with the language”, Alexander admitted.
“Three
weeks? And how long do you plan to stay?”
“I
stayed for nearly a year there”, Mr Tuniak explained. “It was the
most quiet year in my whole life. I never used the time machine, not
even once, during the whole time.”
“You
did not tell me where this monastery was located?”, I said. “Not
even the continent.”
“I
was there two hundred years ago, I doesn't exist any more”, he
answered.
Since he
apparently didn't want to divulge any further information regarding
the monastery's location, I changed the subject. “And what did you
do, once the year was over?”
“I
decided to return to my family... to my friends”, Mr Tuniak said.
“The last time I had returned to the Villa Atterton, I had expected
to find everything the same way I had left it. That way my mistake.
We all change and there are some place not even a time machine can
take you. But it had also been a mistake that I did not try to start
something new. A mistake I had decided to remedy.”
NEXT
WEEK
Das
Schönste, was wir erleben können, ist das Geheimnisvolle.
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